Home > Press > Physicists watch as ultracold atoms form a crystal of quantum tornadoes: The new observations record a key crossover from classical to quantum behavior
Just like the formation of weather patterns on Earth, here a spinning fluid of quantum particles breaks up into a crystal formed from swirling, tornado-like structures.
Credits:Credit: Courtesy of the researchers |
Abstract:
The world we experience is governed by classical physics. How we move, where we are, and how fast were going are all determined by the classical assumption that we can only exist in one place at any one moment in time.
Physicists watch as ultracold atoms form a crystal of quantum tornadoes: The new observations record a key crossover from classical to quantum behavior
Cambridge, MA | Posted on January 7th, 2022
But in the quantum world, the behavior of individual atoms is governed by the eerie principle that a particles location is a probability. An atom, for instance, has a certain chance of being in one location and another chance of being at another location, at the same exact time.
When particles interact, purely as a consequence of these quantum effects, a host of odd phenomena should ensue. But observing such purely quantum mechanical behavior of interacting particles amid the overwhelming noise of the classical world is a tricky undertaking.
Now, MIT physicists have directly observed the interplay of interactions and quantum mechanics in a particular state of matter: a spinning fluid of ultracold atoms. Researchers have predicted that, in a rotating fluid, interactions will dominate and drive the particles to exhibit exotic, never-before-seen behaviors.
In a study published today in Nature, the MIT team has rapidly rotated a quantum fluid of ultracold atoms. They watched as the initially round cloud of atoms first deformed into a thin, needle-like structure. Then, at the point when classical effects should be suppressed, leaving solely interactions and quantum laws to dominate the atoms behavior, the needle spontaneously broke into a crystalline pattern, resembling a string of miniature, quantum tornadoes.
This crystallization is driven purely by interactions, and tells us were going from the classical world to the quantum world, says Richard Fletcher, assistant professor of physics at MIT.
The results are the first direct, in-situ documentation of the evolution of a rapidly-rotating quantum gas. Martin Zwierlein, the Thomas A. Frank Professor of Physics at MIT, says the evolution of the spinning atoms is broadly similar to how Earths rotation spins up large-scale weather patterns.
The Coriolis effect that explains Earths rotational effect is similar to the Lorentz force that explains how charged particles behave in a magnetic field, Zwierlein notes. Even in classical physics, this gives rise to intriguing pattern formation, like clouds wrapping around the Earth in beautiful spiral motions. And now we can study this in the quantum world.
The studys coauthors include Biswaroop Mukherjee, Airlia Shaffer, Parth B. Patel, Zhenjie Yan, Cedric Wilson, and Valentin Crépel, who are all affiliated with the MIT-Harvard Center for Ultracold Atoms and MITs Research Laboratory of Electronics.
Spinning stand-ins
In the 1980s, physicists began observing a new family of matter known as quantum Hall fluids, which consists of clouds of electrons floating in magnetic fields. Instead of repelling each other and forming a crystal, as classical physics would predict, the particles adjusted their behavior to what their neighbors were doing, in a correlated, quantum way.
People discovered all kinds of amazing properties, and the reason was, in a magnetic field, electrons are (classically) frozen in place all their kinetic energy is switched off, and whats left is purely interactions, Fletcher says. So, this whole world emerged. But it was extremely hard to observe and understand.
In particular, electrons in a magnetic field move in very small motions that are hard to see. Zwierlein and his colleagues reasoned that, as the motion of atoms under rotation occurs at much larger length scales, they might be able to use utracold atoms as stand-ins for electrons, and be able to watch identical physics.
We thought, lets get these cold atoms to behave as if they were electrons in a magnetic field, but that we could control precisely, Zwierlein says. Then we can visualize what individual atoms are doing, and see if they obey the same quantum mechanical physics.
Weather in a carousel
In their new study, the physicists used lasers to trap a cloud of about 1 million sodium atoms, and cooled the atoms to temperatures of about 100 nanokelvins. They then used a system of electromagnets to generate a trap to confine the atoms, and collectively spun the atoms around, like marbles in a bowl, at about 100 rotations per second.
The team imaged the cloud with a camera, capturing a perspective similar to a childs when facing towards the center on a playground carousel. After about 100 milliseconds, the researchers observed that the atoms spun into a long, needle-like structure, which reached a critical, quantum thinness.
In a classical fluid, like cigarette smoke, it would just keep getting thinner, Zwierlein says. But in the quantum world, a fluid reaches a limit to how thin it can get.
When we saw it had reached this limit, we had good reason to think we were knocking on the door of interesting, quantum physics, adds Fletcher, who with Zwierlein, published the results up to this point in a previous Science paper. Then the question was, what would this needle-thin fluid do under the influence of purely rotation and interactions?
In their new paper, the team took their experiment a crucial step further, to see how the needle-like fluid would evolve. As the fluid continued to spin, they observed a quantum instability starting to kick in: The needle began to waver, then corkscrew, and finally broke into a string of rotating blobs, or miniature tornadoes a quantum crystal, arising purely from the interplay of the rotation of the gas, and forces between the atoms.
This evolution connects to the idea of how a butterfly in China can create a storm here, due to instabilities that set off turbulence, Zwierlein explains. Here, we have quantum weather: The fluid, just from its quantum instabilities, fragments into this crystalline structure of smaller clouds and vortices. And its a breakthrough to be able to see these quantum effects directly.
This research was supported, in part, by the National Science Foundation, the Air Force Office of Scientific Research, the Office of Naval Research, the Vannevar Bush Faculty Fellowship, and DARPA.
####
For more information, please click here
Contacts:
Abby Abazorius
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Office: 617-253-2709
Copyright © Massachusetts Institute of Technology
If you have a comment, please Contact us.
Issuers of news releases, not 7th Wave, Inc. or Nanotechnology Now, are solely responsible for the accuracy of the content.
Physics
Intense monocycle terahertz pulses from shifting electrons in quantum structures January 7th, 2022
Researchers detect two-dimensional kagome surface states January 7th, 2022
Quantum Physics
Intense monocycle terahertz pulses from shifting electrons in quantum structures January 7th, 2022
News and information
Researchers detect two-dimensional kagome surface states January 7th, 2022
Mass production of revolutionary computer memory moves closer with ULTRARAM on silicon wafers for the first time January 7th, 2022
Govt.-Legislation/Regulation/Funding/Policy
Nanotube fibers stand strong — but for how long? Rice scientists calculate how carbon nanotubes and their fibers experience fatigue December 24th, 2021
Major instrumentation initiative for research into quantum technologies: Paderborn University receives funding from German Research Foundation December 24th, 2021
UMass Lowell scientist pioneers new class of semiconductors: $1.7M NSF project aims to improve wireless communication, imaging, more December 17th, 2021
Possible Futures
Intense monocycle terahertz pulses from shifting electrons in quantum structures January 7th, 2022
Organic light emitting diodes operated by 1.5 V battery January 7th, 2022
In vivo generation of engineered CAR T cells can repair a broken heart January 7th, 2022
A single molecule makes a big splash in the understanding of the two types of water January 7th, 2022
Discoveries
Intense monocycle terahertz pulses from shifting electrons in quantum structures January 7th, 2022
Organic light emitting diodes operated by 1.5 V battery January 7th, 2022
Researchers detect two-dimensional kagome surface states January 7th, 2022
Announcements
Researchers detect two-dimensional kagome surface states January 7th, 2022
Mass production of revolutionary computer memory moves closer with ULTRARAM on silicon wafers for the first time January 7th, 2022
Terahertz light-driven spin-lattice control: A new potential path to faster and more efficient data storage January 7th, 2022
In vivo generation of engineered CAR T cells can repair a broken heart January 7th, 2022
Interviews/Book Reviews/Essays/Reports/Podcasts/Journals/White papers/Posters
Mass production of revolutionary computer memory moves closer with ULTRARAM on silicon wafers for the first time January 7th, 2022
Super-resolved imaging of a single cold atom on a nanosecond timescale January 7th, 2022
Terahertz light-driven spin-lattice control: A new potential path to faster and more efficient data storage January 7th, 2022
In vivo generation of engineered CAR T cells can repair a broken heart January 7th, 2022
Military
Series of preclinical studies supports the Armys pan-coronavirus vaccine development strategy December 17th, 2021
Light speed advances: UD Prof. Tingyi Gu receives DARPA Young Faculty Award December 3rd, 2021
Energizer atoms: JILA researchers find new way to keep atoms excited November 19th, 2021